On Monday, April 13, 2009, I visited the Culver City Council meeting and I learned that they are using the government in the form of a board meeting. In cities with a population of approximately 38,000 people, such a government structure is very common, and I am not surprised by the community whose median household income is approximately 56,000 dollars per year. Culver City is also a culturally rich community that includes 60 per cent of the Caucasian population, one in four African Americans or Asian residents.
I attended the special meeting of the Culver City Council on March 13, 2018. I sat down to see a representative of Vigilant Solutions and a police station in Culver City who spent over $ 200,000 to install an automatic license plate reader (ALPR) throughout Cigver City. As they were able to scan and keep all the license plates inside and outside of Culver City, I read these statements on how these readers made it easier for police to track cars including criminals I heard. In contrast to ALPR, I listened to more than 50 community members (residents of Culver City and residents around Los Angeles). In particular, the way Vigilant Solutions entered into a third - party contract with ICE, and Culver City is a shelter. Council member Meghan Sahli - Wells expressed concern about the program and heard that mayor 's own Jeff Cooper expresses concern about the company' s cooperation with ICE.
On Tuesday April 10, two new city council members were elected in Culver City. The city voted for Daniel Lee and Alex Fish. Lee and Fisch were two progressive approvals approved by the Culver City Democracy Club and I actively opposed the drilling expansion proposed in the Inglewood field, so I voted for two candidates. Before talking about this election, I would like to talk about other things the city council did in the month before the election.